2013 07 05 mvv section1

Fast,
fresh
and hard
to find
WEEKEND | 16
JULY 5, 2013 VOLUME 21, NO. 23
www.MountainViewOnline.com
650.964.6300
MOVIES | 19
Bike-pedestrian upgrades
coming to a street near you
GOOGLE GIVES CITY’S BIKE AND PEDESTRIAN
NETWORK $435,000 BOOST
By Daniel DeBolt
A
COOL, BABY
MAGALI GAUTHIER
Marianna Exline-Manson beats the heat at Eagle Pool with help from her parents,
Kristina Exline-Manson and Josh Manson, on July 1. The visiting family, which hails
from Brooklyn, NY, joined a mob of locals looking for ways to keep cool during
the heat wave’s soaring temperatures.
I now pronounce you…
COUNTY CLERK’S OFFICE ALL SET FOR SAME-SEX MARRIAGES
By Nick Veronin
T
he Santa Clara County ClerkRecorder’s Office has begun issuing marriage licenses to same-sex
couples.
Just hours after it was announced
that California’s Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals was lifting its stay on the
2010 ruling overturning Proposition
8, County Clerk-Recorder Gina Alco-
INSIDE
mendras directed her office to issue
licenses to gay and lesbian couples.
The announcement came shortly
before the clerk-recorder’s office closed
on Friday, June 28, and according to a
county media representative, no samesex couples showed up that day. When
the office re-opened Monday morning,
See MARRIAGE LICENSE, page 10
slew of upgrades around town for
bicyclists and pedestrians are in the
newly approved city budget, thanks
to the efforts of activists and a little funding
from Google.
The City’s 2013-14 budget, approved last
month, includes a long list of upgrades
around town for those on foot and on bike,
paid in part with $435,000 from Google
and millions of dollars more in city funds.
In a letter about the offer, Google real
estate chief David Radcliffe said he was
“delighted” the city had made such things
a top priority this year and offered the city
$500,000 towards the cause, which aligns
with Google’s interest in getting its employees on two wheels.
The Google projects include $50,000
for sorely needed downtown bike racks,
$150,000 to help extend the Permanente
Creek Trail to Middlefield Road and
$160,000 towards creating a new bicycle
transportation plan for the city that will
prioritize improvements and provide measurable goals, such as reducing the number
of collisions involving bicycles.
Google also agreed to donate $75,000
to add flashing lights to three crosswalks
on Shoreline Boulevard near downtown,
where police recently reported that drivers
were not stopping for a pedestrian decoy
entering several crosswalks there. Google
happens to have purchased an office
complex nearby, at the corner of Shoreline
Boulevard and Villa Street.
“We’re proud to call Mountain View
home and are thrilled to work with the
city to promote a more walkable and bikefriendly community,” Radcliffe said in an
email.
Google’s property taxes will also help pay
towards funding a dedicated “cycle track”
— a protected bike lane from downtown to
the office district where Google headquarters is located, possibly over a new bridge at
Highway 101. A $600,000 study of the cycle
track is in the city’s new budget, paid for by
the special Shoreline Fund tax district, the
recipient of Google property taxes.
There’s a multitude of such projects not
funded by Google, including the narrowing of Castro Street in front of Graham
Middle School from four lanes to one in
each direction. That project came about
after three children were hit by cars last
year while crossing the street. The intent
See GOOGLE BIKES, page 13
Council considers another
downtown office project
By Daniel DeBolt
A
three-story office building has
been proposed for the corner of
Bryant and Dana streets amid a
spurt of office development in downtown Mountain View.
The City Council was set to vote on
the downtown project Tuesday night,
after the Voice’s early press deadline. It
would put a 67,772-square-foot building where Dunn Automotive now sits,
VIEWPOINT 15 | GOINGS ON 20 | MARKETPLACE 21 | REAL ESTATE 23
across Bryant Street near Los Charros
Taqueria. Two vacant single-family
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the 1.13-acre site, along with the
1,800-square-foot building that houses
Peery Piano Academy.
The building is designed around a
large oak tree on Bryant Street, making
the tree into a focal point. There would
See OFFICE PROJECT, page 7
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A R O U N D
T O W N
Asked in downtown Mountain View. Photos by Sofia Biros and interviews by Elize
Manoukian.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR VOTE
OF CONFIDENCE IN 2013!
2012
Go to MountainViewOnline.com and Vote!
- OR Scan the QR Code and vote with your mobile phone!
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“Freedom
has its life in the hearts,
the actions, and the spirit of men
and it must be
daily earned and refreshed
else, like a flower cut from
life-giving roots,
it will wither and die”
- DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
34th President of The United States
N CRIMEBRIEF
ATTEMPTED BURGLARY
Police believe someone attempted to break into a home on the
1800 block of Fordham Way sometime between June 26 in the
evening and the morning of June 27.
A painter working on the house, which is under construction,
told police that when he arrived to work on the house at 7 a.m. on
June 27, he noticed pry marks on a side door to the home’s garage,
according to Sean Thompson, public information officer with the
Mountain View Police Department.
The painter said the pry marks weren’t there when he left the
house the previous day at 8 p.m., Thompson said. The painter
also told police that a spool of wire had been taken from the back
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During this
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we Celebrate the efforts of those,
present and past,
who worked and fought hard
to earn and refresh our freedom.
Take a moment to remember their
effort, and Celebrate that Spirit.
The Mountain View Voice (USPS 2560) is published every Friday by
Embarcadero Media, 450 Cambridge Ave, Palo Alto CA 94306 (650) 964-6300.
Periodicals Postage Paid at Palo Alto CA and additional mailing offices. The
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■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 5, 2013
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MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE
■ CITY COUNCIL UPDATES
■ COMMUNITY
■ FEATURES
A victory march for
marriage equality
By Daniel DeBolt
O
MICHELLE LE
Ben Gertzfeld embraces his partner William Hamilton at the rally and march through downtown
Mountain View celebrating the Supreme Court’s June 26 decision. The couple say they’ve been
engaged for the past four years while same-sex marriage was illegal in California.
Women’s hospital celebrating 20 years
By Nick Veronin
T
he first women’s hospital
to open its doors in Northern California is celebrating its 20th anniversary.
Women’s Health at El Camino
Hospital, a special wing of the
hospital, opened in the Orchard
Pavilion building on the hospital
campus in June of 1993.
The original focus of the hospital was mainly maternal services, obstetrics and gynecology,
but the center has expanded its
focus to include cardiovascular
care, mental health and bone
health, according to Women’s Health Executive Director
Michele van Zuiden.
Zuiden told the Voice that
women face different health
problems as they age and often
experience health issues differently than men.
“When women suffer from a
heart attack, they have different
signs and symptoms than men,”
she said, noting that men often
experience what is known as
the “Hollywood heart attack”
— sudden, crushing chest pain
coming out of the blue. “Women
often have much more subtle
symptoms,” she explained —
such as fatigue and only mild
numbness in an arm.
As the health center recently
changed its name from Women’s
Hospital to Women’s Health, it
has been expanding its efforts
to educate the community about
things like this.
Women also suffer depression at a higher rate than men,
n the evening of the
Supreme Court ruling
against California’s gay
marriage ban, over 100 people
marched through downtown
Mountain View to celebrate, carrying rainbow flags.
The signs said, “Marry who
you love” and “I do — support
marriage equality.” Marchers
chanted, “With liberty and justice for all” and “Yes, we can!”
Supportive onlookers included
some elated restaurant employees
who pointed to a gay co-worker,
saying, “I’m happy for him!”
At City Hall the June 26 march
turned into a rally where City
Council member Chris Clark
was among the speakers.
Clark said he was hon-
Zuiden said, mentioning that
Women’s Health at El Camino
Hospital has a “very robust
behavioral health program.”
The specialized center has
been regularly recognized by the
magazine “Bay Area Parent” as
the best place in the area to have
a baby.
Zuiden said she believes this
is due to a number of factors,
including caring, attentive staff
and state-of-the-art technology.
A recently completed focus
group study of mothers who gave
birth at Women’s Health said they
were very satisfied with their stay,
according to Zuiden. “What they
ored to stand in front of the
crowd “as Mountain View’s first
openly gay elected official, and
proudly proclaim that DOMA
(the Defense of Marriage Act)
and Prop. 8 are dead.” He later
added, “Tomorrow, our fight
continues. There are still 37
states where LGBT people are
still second-class citizens and
today’s ruling did nothing to
change that.”
The court’s decision killed the
Defense of Marriage Act, which,
among other things, kept the
spouses of gay federal government employees from having the
same benefits as straight couples,
including health care and pension benefits.
NASA Ames Research Center
See MARRIAGE EQUALITY, page 11
talked about a lot was the service
and caring of our nurses.”
Women’s Health at El Camino
Hospital also has one of the most
advanced neonatal facilities in
the area.
All of this contribute to the
high number of women who
choose to have their baby at
ECH, she said.
Since the women’s hospital was
founded in 1993, doctors there
have delivered about 85,000 children — about half of the entire
number of babies delivered at El
Camino Hospital since it opened
its doors in 1961. “We are very
proud of that,” she said.
V
Local actor’s Cinderella story
By Elize Manoukian
F
or Nick Spangler, stage
fright is not an option.
“I’m being watched all
the time,” Spangler said. “When
you’re on stage, no matter how
small your role is, somebody in
the audience could be watching
you at any given moment, so you
can’t ever relax.”
While many would crumble
under the pressure, Spangler
thrives on it. It’s safe to say the
Los Altos native seeks it out, from
his work on reality television to
roles in a number of productions
on and off Broadway, culminating in his recent debut as Prince
Charming in the Tony awardwinning adaptation of Rodgers
& Hammerstein’s “Cinderella”
currently on Broadway.
Spangler has felt at home on
stage since he was a munchkin
playing a Munchkin. When he
was 5, his mother signed him
up for a Los Altos Youth Theatre
production of the Wizard of Oz,
marking his theater debut as
one of the story’s famous smallstatured characters.
“When I was growing up, doing
shows was my after-school activity,” Spangler recalled. “Instead
of sports, my mom would drive
me to wherever I was doing a play
or musical.”
After graduating from Mountain View High School, Spangler
moved to New York to attend
New York University, where he
received a bachelor of fine arts
degree in musical theater. His
first major role was the character
of Matt in an off-Broadway production of “The Fantasticks.”
When the show ended in 2006,
Spangler directed his energy in
a very different direction. Nick
and his sister Starr were cast
in the 2008-09 season of “The
Amazing Race,” a globe-trotting reality show, and Spangler
immediately began preparing by
COURTESY NICK SPANGLER
See LOCAL ACTOR, page 14
Nick Spangler gets help with his crown as he prepares for his debut as
Prince Charming in the Broadway production of “Cinderella.”
July 5, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
5
-PDBM/FXT
Judge: LASD may split Bullis
CHARTER SCHOOL OFFICIALS NOT HAPPY WITH RULING ON TWO-CAMPUS SOLUTION
By Nick Veronin
I
n the latest decision in the
ongoing legal battle between
Bullis Charter School and the
Los Altos School District, a judge
ruled that the district has the
right to split the charter school
between two separate campuses
— Egan and Blach.
In his ruling, Santa Clara
County Superior Court Judge
Mark H. Pierce wrote, “The
court finds that there is no
requirement that a school district
provide an offer of facilities to a
charter school only at contiguous sites. Rather, a school district
may determine that more than
one facility may be included in
the offer as long as there are no
other facilities available within
the district.”
While officials with Los Altos
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■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 5, 2013
district hailed the decision, a
member of Bullis’ board had
a number of objections to the
ruling.
“No other schoolchild in the
Los Altos School District is
forced to go to a school that is
located on two campuses,” said
Joe Hurd, a BCS board member.
In the 2013-14 school year, Bullis’
625 students will be split between
the campuses of Egan Junior
High School and Blach Intermediate School.
The split campus solution is
“making it extremely difficult to
figure out how the schedules will
work,” Hurd said. “Whether it’s
legal or not, I don’t think it passes
anyone’s test of fairness.”
But according to Doug Smith,
president of LASD’s board of
trustees, the district has no
other option. The district, he
said, is overcrowded and has
been searching diligently for a
suitable location for two new
campuses — one for an additional LASD site and a place to
put Bullis.
Under California law, according to the rules set out in Proposition 39, all school districts are
required to provide “reasonably
equivalent” facilities to charter
schools located within their
boundaries. Each year, charters
and districts in the state go
through a process determining
whether reasonable equivalency
continues to exist. Bullis and
LASD have been at odds for
years now over this very issue
— with the district arguing it is
doing its best to give BCS a fair
‘Whether it’s legal
or not, I don’t think
it passes anyone’s
test of fairness.
—JOE HURD, BCS BOARD MEMBER
shake and the charter school
disagreeing vehemently.
In the latest iteration of the
years-long legal battle, BCS
has argued that it is illegal for
the district to split its school
between two campuses. But district officials, like Smith, have
said that, at the moment, there
is no other answer.
“We’re looking at every conceivable option,” Smith said,
noting that he doesn’t believe
the current Egan-Blach split
campus is ideal. “Ideal to me is
we find some more land to fill
some more campuses.”
According to Smith, the district is currently responsible
for providing space to around
5,000 kids, including BCS students. The last time the district
had that many students was in
the early 1970s, he said, and
back then the district had 12
campuses — four more than its
current nine campusus.
All that is true, Hurd acknowledged. But he said he wasn’t
entirely convinced the district
was doing everything it could
to come up with a solution to its
space problem.
“Since February, LASD and
BCS have not had a face-to-face
meeting,” Hurd said — even
though the charter school has
been calling for such a conference, he said. “Because the
district has refused to meet with
BCS we’ve never had the opportunity to have a real conversation about real facilities.”
Smith said that Bullis and
LASD will have just such a conversation very soon. The two
parties are scheduled to begin
talks in August to see if they can
manage to agree on a facilities
agreement for the 2014-15 school
year.
V
-PDBM/FXT
COURTESY CITY OF MOUNTAIN VIEW
An oak tree along Bryant Street is preserved in the project.
OFFICE PROJECT
Continued from page 1
be 153 parking spaces in a two-story
underground garage and a small gradelevel parking lot.
Several residential neighbors have
expressed concerns about increased
traffic on Dana Street, calling for the
developer to move the building’s main
driveway onto Bryant Street. City staff
members said in a staff report that there
is no evidence that the building will cause
COURTESY CITY OF MOUNTAIN VIEW
An office building is proposed for the corner of Dana and Bryant streets downtown.
a traffic problem, but zoning administrator Peter Gilli has required that a study
be done after it is built. If traffic fixes are
needed, the city may paint curbs red and
prohibit parking on portions of Dana
during rush hour to effectively widen the
street and allow for better traffic flow.
Three other office projects are under
construction downtown, with another
recently approved for the corner of
Church and Castro streets.
For an updated story on how the council
voted, go to mv-voice.com.
V
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July 5, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
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JULY 2013
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prevention of photo-aging changes and tips for younger looking skin.
HEALTHY FAMILY MEALS
DR. MARVIN SMALL MEMORIAL PARENT WORKSHOP
JULY 9, 7 – 8:30 P.M.
KAREN ROSS, R.D.
PARENTSPLACE
This workshop will cover the importance of family meals and what a
family meal should look like. We’ll also offer strategies to make family
meals easier and more enjoyable for all.
SOUTH ASIAN NUTRITION
Central Park Library
2635 Homestead Road
Santa Clara
No registration required.
JULY 9, 2:30 – 4 P.M.
SEEMA KARNIK, R.D.
PAMF NUTRITION SERVICES
The South Asian diet can be high in calories and rich in saturated
fats. The increased risk of heart disease makes eating a wellbalanced diet important for South Asians of all ages. This doesn’t
mean you have to give up your favorite foods. There are some simple
rules you can follow for healthy eating – come to our lecture on
ﬁnding a good balance!
ESCAPE FIRE: THE FIGHT TO RESCUE AMERICAN HEALTHCARE
2013 HEALTHY SCREENINGS FILM SERIES
Mountain View Center
701 E. El Camino Real
Mountain View
650-934-7373
JULY 26, FILM STARTS AT 7 P.M.
Join us to view this thought-provoking ﬁlm and engage in a lively
discussion, moderated by PAMF Family Medicine doctor and former
ﬁlm critic Ed Yu, M.D. This month’s ﬁlm takes a look at many areas
of our current health care system including our safety net clinics,
hospitals, the pharmaceutical industry, the military and multispecialty
group practices, like PAMF. The ﬁlm provides a good background
for discussion by giving examples of the status quo and proposing a
shift to a model of care that will improve the health of our nation.
FOOD IS YOUR MEDICINE!
Foster City Library
1000 E. Hillsdale Blvd.
Foster City
No registration required.
JULY 31, 6:30 – 8 P.M.
PATRICIA SANTANA, M.D., AND LINDA SHIUE, M.D.
PAMF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Do you want to eat healthier but don’t know where to start? Do you
feel like you don’t have the time or skills to cook? Drs. Santana and
Shiue will describe and demonstrate how to use your most powerful
tool, your fork, to make healthy choices. What you choose to eat has
a direct impact on your health. Our hope is that you feel empowered
in making healthy choices, and can taste for yourself that there is no
need to compromise on taste!
Scan this code with your smartphone/
tablet for more health education information.
Get the free mobile scanner app at
http://gettag.mobi.
8
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 5, 2013
FILE PHOTO
Mountain View Center
701 E. El Camino Real
Mountain View
650-934-7373
Jose Vargas
Vargas gives De Anza grads
advice, challenge
By Elize Manoukian
A
new generation of De
Anza College graduates
were welcomed by keynote speaker Jose Antonio Vargas
amidst Saturday morning’s sweltering heat.
Among the class of 2013’s
approximately 1,900 graduates, about 1,300 were receiving degrees and 500 earning
certificates in career fields. Two
students, Angelica Esquivel and
Shaila Ramos, were awarded the
President’s Award scholarship by
college President Brian Murphy in
recognition of their perseverance
and diligence at De Anza College.
Vargas, who is now a highprofile advocate for immigration reform, singled out Esquivel
and Ramos, both Dream Act
students, for their roles as prominent campus activists for immigration reform. Immigration is
the subject of much of Vargas’
work as a journalist and documentary filmmaker, especially
since Vargas revealed his own
undocumented status in a June
2011 essay for The New York
Times Magazine.
Vargas balanced advice for
the graduates with stories of his
own experiences, recounting his
move from the Philippines to
Mountain View in 1993. Vargas
recalled his first American memories: of the knee-bashing attack
on ice skater Nancy Kerrigan; the
OJ Simpson trial; and Seinfeld. “I
thought everybody was Jewish,”
he quipped.
His focus shifted four years
later, when he was turned away
at the DMV after trying to obtain
a driver’s license. A conversation
with his uncle revealed what he
hadn’t known: he was living in
his new homeland illegally.
Thanks to an extensive support
system of family and educators,
Vargas was able to build a career
as a successful journalist, eventually winning the Pulitzer Prize
in 2008 for his work covering the
Virginia Tech massacre for the
Washington Post. Vargas said
he recognizes the irony of enjoying this professional status in
America while still lacking technical status through documentation. This conflict motivated his
decision to join what he referred
to as “this growing movement
of Americans ‘coming out’ (as
undocumented).”
Vargas received cheers when he
called community colleges the
“under-appreciated backbone
of America’s higher education
system” and parted with the
students by encouraging them
to take neither citizenship nor
change for granted.
“Don’t get comfortable,” Vargas said. “Don’t settle. Don’t be a
part of the institution. Become
your own institution.”
V
-PDBM/FXT
Man shot in head during robbery
By Andrea Gemmet
A
man was shot in the head
during a struggle with a
robber on Monday afternoon, July 1, on Fairchild Drive,
police said. Officers failed to
turn up the suspect despite an
extensive search, according to a
Mountain View police spokesman.
The victim, a man in his 20s,
was walking along Fairchild
Drive near Tyrella Avenue at
around 1:15 p.m. when he allegedly was approached by a man
armed with a handgun. The
suspect took property from the
man, and in the struggle the
victim was shot in what police
described as a â&#x20AC;&#x153;grazing-type
woundâ&#x20AC;? to the head. He was not
seriously injured, police said in a
press release.
The victim was taken to the
hospital and later released.
The suspect is described as a
black male adult, 6 feet tall, in his
mid-20s, and was wearing a darkcolored baseball cap and dark
jeans. Police said they set up an
extensive perimeter to search for
suspect, but did not find him.
Police declined to disclose
more details before the Voiceâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
press deadline on Tuesday, as the
investigation is ongoing. Anyone
with information about this case
is asked to call the Mountain
View Police Department at 650903-6344. Callers may remain
anonymous.
V
Inspirations
a guide to the spiritual community
LOS ALTOS LUTHERAN
Bringing Godâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Love and Hope to All
Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Nursery
10:00 a.m. Worship
10:10 Sunday School
11:15 a.m. Fellowship
Pastor David K. Bonde
Outreach Pastor Gary Berkland
460 South El Monte (at Cuesta)
650-948-3012
www.losaltoslutheran.org
To include your
Church in
Inspirations
Please call
Blanca Yoc
at 650-223-6596
or email
byoc@paweekly.com
ST. ANN ANGLICAN CHAPEL
Includes
T-shirt & Lunch
s &ULLY SUPPORTED WATERREST STOPS
s ""1 LUNCH CATERED BY ,UTTICKENS $ELI
s &REE 4
SHIRT FOR EVERY RIDER WHO REGISTERS ONLINE
s AM OR AM START TIME AT -ENLO
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SUCH AS "OYS AND
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Ă&#x2C6;xUĂ&#x160;{Ă&#x2C6;Ă&#x160;UĂ&#x160;Ă&#x17D;xĂ&#x160;
-
A TRADITIONAL EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
x{ÂŁĂ&#x160;iÂ?Ă&#x203A;Â&#x2C6;Â?Â?iĂ&#x160;Ă&#x203A;iÂ°]Ă&#x160;*>Â?Â&#x153;Ă&#x160;Â?Ă&#x152;Â&#x153;]Ă&#x160;
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The Most Reverend Robert S. Morse, Vicar
Reverend Matthew Weber, Assistant
-Ă&#x2022;Â&#x2DC;`>Ă&#x17E;\Ă&#x160;ÂŁÂŁ\Ă¤Ă¤>Â&#x201C;Â&#x2021;
Â&#x2026;Â&#x153;Ă&#x20AC;>Â?Ă&#x160;
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>Ă&#x20AC;iĂ&#x160;*Ă&#x20AC;Â&#x153;Ă&#x203A;Â&#x2C6;`i`
MOUNTAIN VIEW CENTRAL SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH
Sabbath School: 9:30 a.m.
Saturday Services: Worship 10:45 a.m.
Wednesday Study Groups: 10-11 a.m.
Pastor Kenny Fraser, B.A.M. DIV
1425 Springer Rd., Mtn. View - OfďŹ ce Hrs. M-F 9am-1pm
www.mtviewda.adventistfaith.org Phone: 650-967-2189
Breakfast & Lunch
is FREE!!!
Mountain View Whisman
School District
FREE Community Feeding
available Monday-Friday for ages 1-18
SATURDAY
AUGUST 17
REGISTER:
www.tourdemenlo.com
Ride day registration 8am-10am
at Menlo-Atherton High School, 555 Middlefield Rd
June 17-July 26, 2013
Closed on July 4!
Breakfast: 7:30-8:30am
Lunch: 11:30-12:30pm
Meals will be served at the following
MVWSD school site:
Monta Loma Elementary School
460 Thompson Avenue
Mountain View, CA 94043
Sponsored by
For additional information call
MVWSD Child Nutrition Department (650) 903-6965
â&#x20AC;&#x153;In accordance with Federal law and U.S. Department of Agriculture policy,
this institution is prohibited from discriminating on the basis of race, color,
national origin, sex, age, or disability. To ďŹ le a complaint of discrimination,
write USDA, Director, OfďŹ ce of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue,
SW, Washington, D.C. 20250-9410, or call 800-795-3272 or 202-7206382 (TYY). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer.â&#x20AC;?
July 5, 2013 â&#x2013; Mountain View Voice â&#x2013; MountainViewOnline.com â&#x2013;
9
-PDBM/FXT
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Continued from page 1
July 1, somewhere between 10
to 15 same-sex couples were
lined up and ready to request
a marriage license — and in
some cases be married right
then and there.
Gwendolyn Mitchell, director of public affairs for Santa
Clara County, said the couples
began lining up before 8 a.m.
outside the clerk-recorder’s
office, located in the San Jose
Civic Center complex. Mitchell said the office had seen
a steady stream of same-sex
couples all day, and had taken
measures to ensure things
moved smoothly.
Some of the couples who
showed up on July 1 were married by Santa Clara County
Supervisor Ken Yeager.
Reached by phone Monday
shortly after noon, the openly
gay Yeager said he had officiated at eight marriages and was
optimistic that he would preside
over more by the day’s end.
Yeager, who oversees Santa
Clara County’s fourth district,
said he had become emotional
a few times during the day —
especially when he said those
fateful words: “I now pronounce
you married under the laws of
the state of California.”
He said he was reminded of
the same sex-marriages he officiated at five years ago, when it
first became legal in the state.
“I hadn’t been able to say that
in five years,” he said. “I feel
a great deal of pride for my
country, knowing I could utter
those words.”
On the ground floor of 70
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MICHELLE LE
Ebullient supporters marched to Mountain View’s City Hall Wednesday night, June 26.
W. Heading Street in San Jose
— where the clerk-recorder’s
office is located — signs direct
couples to the appropriate area
to obtain their marriage licenses and officials are on standby
to answer any questions.
For those who are interested,
an “express marriage” can
be arranged, Mitchell said.
Those who granted a marriage
license can choose to be married immediately afterward by
a county clerk.
Mitchell said the county is
ready in case there is a surge
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Downtown Mountain View
Free Parking!
July 11
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C o m e tto
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July 25
D o w n to
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10
or, if they choose, in an on-site
wedding chapel.
Anyone interested in obtaining a marriage license, getting
married by a county clerk, or
being deputized to perform
civil marriage ceremonies may
call 408-299-5688.
6lVgYÄL^cc^c\
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in the number of couples interested in obtaining marriage
licenses and getting married
by county clerks. A majority of
the clerks have been deputized
to perform marriages. Couples
can be married right at one of
the office’s 27 service windows
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 5, 2013
V
-PDBM/FXT
MARRIAGE EQUALITY
Continued from page 5
employee Robert McCann said
he and his partner were married
when it was legal in California
five years ago, but his requests to
add his husband to his employee
benefits were denied.
“I’ve spent the last five years
fighting against the federal government because it discriminated
against us in the most basic way
that an employer can discriminate — it didn’t pay me equally
to my heterosexual colleagues
down the hall,” he said. “Today,
it’s over.”
Now, if McCann were to die,
his husband “will get part of my
pension. He will get Social Security benefits.”
When a friend of McCann’s
lost his wife to cancer in March,
“he had to make the decisions
we all have to make if we are
couple,” he said. “He had to
decide to when to stop treatment. He had to decide when she
was going to die. He did it and
he did it well and he did it with
her approval and her understanding and her knowledge.
And when he called me today, he
said that is what this is all about,
because we also have the right
to make those decisions for our
partners. That’s what it means
that DOMA is gone.”
A transgender woman, Gayle
Humphrey, offered her story.
She married her wife as a man in
1978.
“For the first 30 years of our
marriage the government recognized our marriage because
it was a straight relationship,”
she told the crowd. “One day
when I stepped off the plane
from Bangkok after having
taken care of a physical issue
I needed to have resolved, the
government instantly no longer
recognized our marriage. All
our rights were taken away in a
moment and when we went to
find out why, we were told, ‘It’s
because you are in a same sexrelationship now, you have no
standing, you have no rights.’”
Organizer Ray Hixson, a lawyer, was compelled to read Justice
Anthony Kennedy’s passionate
majority opinion in the ruling.
DOMA “humiliates tens of
thousands of children now being
raised by same-sex couples,”
Kennedy says. “The law in question makes it even more difficult
for the children to understand
the integrity and closeness of
their own family and its concord
with other families in their community and in their daily lives.”
The rally ended with a singing
of the Civil Rights anthem “We
Shall Overcome.”
“Today, we had some overcoming that happened right?” Hixson said.
V
MICHELLE LE
Supporters waved signs at a rally outside City Hall.
TICKETS ON
SALE NOW!
TRIO DA PAZ with
MAÚCHA ADNET
Saturday, July 13
“Fleet-ﬁngered music that
connects jazz with Brazilian
rhythms.” – The New York Times
tickets on sale for these great shows
REBECA MAULEÓN
Sunday, July 21
TIA FULLER QUARTET
Saturday, July 27
SAVION GLOVER
& HIS TRIO
Saturday, August 3
CHRIS POTTER
Wednesday, August 7
ﬁnd out more & purchase tickets
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BOOM TIC BOOM EASTMAN
Friday, July 12
Sunday, July 14
STANLEY
CLARKE TRIO
Saturday, July 20
STANFORDJAZZ.ORG or 650-725-ARTS (2787)
MICHELLE LE
Chris Clark, the first openly gay City Council member, speaks outside
City Hall.
July 5, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
11
DEADLINE TO VOTE THIS SUNDAY, JULY 7
!
e
t
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o
t
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m
i
t
Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
Tell us who your local
favorites are by voting
online today
Vote Online
MountainViewOnline.com/best_of
OR
or from your phone
scan the code to vote
Deadline to vote: July 7
Restaurants
Best Breakfast/Brunch
Best Chinese Restaurant
Best Independent
Coffee House
Best Fine Dining
Best Fusion Restaurant
Best Indian Restaurant
Best Italian Restaurant
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Restaurant
Best Mexican Restaurant
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Best New Restaurant
Best Outdoor Dining
Best Place for a
Business Lunch
Best Seafood Restaurant
Best Sushi/Japanese
Restaurant
Best Thai Restaurant
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Restaurant
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Restaurant
Food and Drink
Best Bagel
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and Decor
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Unusual Gifts
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Frozen Yogurt
Best Noodle Place
Best Pearl Tea
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Best Small Non-Chain
Grocery Store
Best Take-Out
Services
Best Acupuncture
Best Auto Body Repair
Best Auto Repair
Best Chiropractor
Best Dentist
Best Dry Cleaners
Best Gym
Best Fitness Classes
Retail
Best BIke Shop
Best Book Store
Best Florist (Non-Chain)
a Mountain View tradition since 1973
2010
1297 W. El Camino Real, Mountain View
AT -IRAMONTE s WWWTRUEVALUECOM
Vote Us
es
B t Hardware
650-964-7871
12
â&#x2013; Mountain View Voice â&#x2013; MountainViewOnline.com â&#x2013; July 5, 2013
Fun Stuff
Best Happy Hour
Best Park
Best Place for Live Music
Best Place for a Playdate
Thank You
for your
Vote
Vote Us Best
Auto Repair
& Oil Change
ARE
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Open 7 Days
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Best Green Business
Best Hair Salon
Best Hotel
Best Massage
Best Manicure/Pedicure
Best Personal Trainer
Best Pet Care
Best Shoe Repair
Best Yoga
2012
2012
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2011
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Diagnosed Correctly.
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PEOPLE
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GOOGLE BIKES
Continued from page 1
2012
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580 N Rengstorff, Unit F.,Mountain View
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The budget also sets aside
$565,000 for the Safe Routes to
Schools program, which aims to
educate kids about the benefits
and fun of cycling while training them how to ride safely. And
there’s $845,000 for Permanent
Creek Trail street crossings; a new
street level crossing at Charleston
Road and improvements to the
existing underpass at Amphitheatre Parkway. Employees in the
Whisman area will benefit from
improved pedestrian access to
the nearby NASA Ames light rail
station through a new Highway
101 underpass on Ellis Street, to
be designed this year at a cost of
$475,000.
There may be other new projects as well — city staff members
set aside $200,000 for any “new
or emerging” bike and pedestrian needs in the city over the next
year, and there’s still $65,000 in
Google money that has yet to
be spent on bike and pedestrian
improvements.
Agave 194 Castro St.,
650.969.6767, agaveca.com
Fiesta del Mar
1005 N. Shoreline Blvd.,
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Vote for us!
2012
THANK YOU
506 Showers Drive, Mountain View
FOR YOUR VOTE
OF CONFIDENCE
ONCE AGAIN!
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Vote for us!
Dr. William Hall
Dr. Jamie Zubrow ~ Dr. Tiffany Chan
100 W. El Camino Real, Suite 63A Mountain View ( Corner of El Camino & Calderon )
www.SmilesDental.com | 650.964.2626
is to provide room for protected
bike lanes, slow traffic and create shorter crossing distances in
front of the school.
“It’s a very short stretch of road
between Castro (downtown)
and Graham, and yet it’s more
like a speedway,” Principal Kim
Thompson told the City Council
last year about the accidents, one
of which she witnessed.
The “road diet” in front of
Graham would be the city’s first
since a campaign began in late
2012 to make the city’s streets
safer for bicyclists and pedestrians. Road diets have also been
discussed for California Street,
where two pedestrians were
killed by cars last year. There’s
$250,000 to study that possibility in this year’s budget, along
with studying new signs, lighting
and corner “bulb outs” to reduce
crosswalk lengths and slow traffic at intersections on California
and Escuela streets.
Email Daniel DeBolt
at ddebolt@mv-voice.com
July 5, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
13
-PDBM/FXT
LOCAL ACTOR
Continued from page 5
exercising and studying maps.
Spangler found that the skills he
developed for acting were very
similar to those required of the
television show.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;In order to compete in a race
around the world, you have
to be very outgoing and ready
to confront any problem that
comes at you, which I think is
very similar to being onstage,â&#x20AC;?
Spangler said. Twenty-three
days and more than 40,000
miles later, Nick and Starr
Register NOW
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ORGANIC LOCAL
TENDER
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1
$ 99
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ORGANIC LOCAL
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ABY BOK CHOY ZUCCHINI LEEKS
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1
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;I had never
performed it, never
rehearsed it with the
full company.â&#x20AC;&#x2122;
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;NICK SPANGLER, ACTOR
Happy 4th of July
SAN JOSE GROWN
IN HUSK
SUPER SWEET
FRESH DAILY
crossed the finish line in Portland, Ore., in first place.
Spangler, whose family owns
a chain of mortuaries on
the Peninsula, attributes their
million-dollar victory to his
familyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;competitive spirit,â&#x20AC;?
which motivated the pair to
constantly be aware of their
surroundings and always â&#x20AC;&#x153;keep
a guard up.â&#x20AC;? Their excitement
in winning, however, was tempered by the sensation of total
relief.
COLORED $1.49
SQUASH
LB.
SQUASH $4.99
PKG.
BLOSSOMS
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Once my sister and I finally
had a moment without microphones and cameras on and other contestants around, I looked
at her and I said, â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s awesome
that we won, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m really happy
with how this all turned out, but
Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m so glad that itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s over.â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;?
Life after â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Amazing Raceâ&#x20AC;?
continued as usual for Spangler,
who now lives in New York City
with his wife and their dog.
After rejoining the revival cast
of â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Fantasticks,â&#x20AC;? Spangler
then performed in the Broadway
production of â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Book of
Mormonâ&#x20AC;? before landing a part
in â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cinderellaâ&#x20AC;? in the ensemble
and as the understudy for Prince
Charming.
Spangler received a three-week
notice that he would be performing the role when the original lead went on a scheduled
vacation on June 22. However,
a week before, Spanglerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s stage
manager called and informed
him that the other actor was
sick, and that Spangler would
need to perform in two hours.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;I had never performed it,
never rehearsed it with the full
company, never rehearsed with
the actress who played Cinderella, never waltzed with her,â&#x20AC;?
Spangler recalled, still seemingly in disbelief.
Spangler barely had enough
time to rehearse the intense,
10-minute waltz and practice a
few costume changes before it
was time to go on. Despite the
immense pressure, the show was
a success â&#x20AC;&#x201D; or at least Spangler
thinks it was. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The parts that I
do remember seem really good,â&#x20AC;?
Spangler joked.
The next week, Spangler performed the part two more times
as scheduled, this time fully
prepared and with his whole
family there to support him.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Because I had already done it
once under such crazy circumstances ... I felt really comfortable on stage. Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m ready for the
next time I get to do it.â&#x20AC;?
UMBO
IZE
ERY
EATY
Your Everyday Farmers Market
Online at www.DeMartiniOrchard.com
Nick Spangler backstage in his Prince Charming costume.
14
â&#x2013; Mountain View Voice â&#x2013; MountainViewOnline.com â&#x2013; July 5, 2013
V
7JFXQPJOU
Founding Editor, Kate Wakerly
N S TA F F
EDITOR & PUBLISHER
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ADVERTISING
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Member, Mountain View Chamber
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N WHATâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S YOUR VIEW?
All views must include a home address
and contact phone number. Published letters
will also appear on the web site,
www.MountainViewOnline.com, and occasionally on the Town Square forum.
Town Square forum
Post your views on Town Square at
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â&#x2013; YOUR LETTERS
â&#x2013; GUEST OPINIONS
N EDITORIAL
N TOWN SQUARE
THE OPINION OF THE VOICE
H E R E â&#x20AC;&#x2122; S W H AT T H E Y â&#x20AC;&#x2122; R E S AY I N G O N T W O N S Q U A R E
Lush property offers
city a rare opportunity
T
â&#x2013; EDITORIAL
here was a good vibe flowing around the Stieper
property last week as firefighters and other city volunteers, including City Council member Margaret
Abe-Koga, pitched in to clean up years of debris accumulated during the long life of Frances Stieper and her late
husband.
The good feelings came in part after Frances, 92, sold the
property at 771 North Rengstorff to the city with the hope
that its 125 trees and substantial gardens could be preserved
for future generations of Mountain View residents who may
not know what the city looked like before Google and other
high-tech companies took over. Stieper continues to live on
the property temporarily.
And then there is Mountain View firefighter John Miguel,
who befriended Stieper when he first met her on a medical
call for her late husband and realized she could use a lot of
help to keep up with her large property. The two became
good friends, with Miguel and many of his buddies at the
firehouse volunteering their time to spruce up the property.
Miguel says, â&#x20AC;&#x153;I feel like sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s my grandmother.â&#x20AC;? He has
taken her to visit his family in Modesto and says that he has
â&#x20AC;&#x153;...gotten way more out of (the relationship) that she ever
has.â&#x20AC;?
Last week Miguel and a good number of his firefighter
friends continued to work on the cleanup, pushing overloaded wheel barrows filled with debris toward dumpsters
around the property during the clean-up effort. From all
appearances, the fruit trees are healthy and Stieper had the
foresight to bring in a number of beehives to pollinate the
fruit trees.
The hope is that the property can be turned into a park
where residents can visit and see, and perhaps pick, fruit
from trees bearing apricots, figs, avocados, peaches, apples,
oranges and plums. In this way the 1-acre public space will
provide a link to the time when fruit orchards lined the
valley floor, taking advantage of the mild climate and long,
warm summer days.
If all goes well, there will be another link to the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s past
on the property â&#x20AC;&#x201D; the tiny circa-1880 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Immigrant Houseâ&#x20AC;?
that will be moved to a spot among the fruit trees. Marina
Marinovich, who lived on a producing orchard in Mountain
View, is spearheading restoration of the home. The diminutive struction was rescued from the site of the historic but
dilapidated Pearson house on Villa Street, which recently
was demolished to make way for an office building.
Marinovich has plans to bring students to the property so
she can explain the history of Immigrant House and how
food can be grown, a concept thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s become foreign to many
people but is starting to take hold among many Bay Area
residents.
Like many of those present at the cleanup last week, we
hope the city can find a way to preserve the orchard of fruit
trees and gardens, ideally opening them up to field trips,
so local students will be able to see food-bearing trees and
plants in the place once known as the Valley of Heartâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
Delight. It is an amazing opportunity to preserve a slice
of Mountain View that many thought had vanished completely.
BAND MEMBERS GET
PE CREDIT
Members of the local high
schoolsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; marching bands and
color guards will be able to earn
physical education credit for
participating â&#x20AC;&#x201D; but only during their sophomore, junior and
senior years.
Posted by Darin
To me, the key point is: â&#x20AC;&#x153;The passage of the policy puts marching
band and color guard in line with
other extra curricular physical
activities, such as cheerleading,
dance and sports â&#x20AC;&#x201D; all of which
count for P.E. credit.â&#x20AC;?
Posted by Steve
As a former band member and
PE slacker, I can state with
first-person authority: Marching band requires more physical
activity than most PE classes.
Nobody questions whether softball should be part of the PE
program, but really, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re more
likely to sweat just from standing
around in the sun than from the
activity itself.
Posted by MVHS Marching Band
Alum
While I was able to get out of
taking PE during the majority of
my four years at MVHS because
of band and sports, I can say with
certainty that marching band
is way more physically involved
than PE. Thinking back to my
PE class towards the end of the
school year â&#x20AC;&#x201D; we sat around in
the pool. The â&#x20AC;&#x153;physical exerciseâ&#x20AC;?
of the period was swimming
the width of the pool once, not
even the length. It was just social
hour.
Posted by incognito
Once again, comments by people
who know nothing of which
they speak. From the middle of
August to November, stop by
MVHS at 7 a.m. (every day but
Thursday) and take a look at 150
or so kids running around the
field in block formation as part
of their physical conditioning for
marching band.
Posted by Concerned
I am concerned about the actions
of the PE teachers, who use the
cover of allegedly wanting what
is best for the students, when in
reality they were just fighting to
enhance their job security.
Posted by USA, a resident of the
Old Mountain View neighborhood
Well this is one way to boost a
declining marching band enrollment.
Posted by Get Real, a resident of
another community
The PE Teachers have a vested
interest. Many other school districts do this. The marching band
students have to be physically
fit, and it is good exercise. Who
says the PE classes are such good
exercise? Do think it is daily calisthenics? Think again. There is
only time enough in the school
day for so many classes. Marching band involves more than an
hour per day, it goes on before
and/or after school, regularly.
July 5, 2013 â&#x2013; Mountain View Voice â&#x2013; MountainViewOnline.com â&#x2013;
15
8FFLFOE
MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE
■ RESTAURANT REVIEW
■ MOVIE TIMES
■ BEST BETS FOR ENTERTAINMENT
N R E S TA U R A N T R E V I E W
Fast, fresh Y
AND
hard to find
PHOTOS BY MICHELLE LE
OLÉ TAQUERIA SERVES UP
WELL-PRICED, TASTY FARE NEAR
SHORELINE, MOVIE THEATERS
Carne asada is among the
well-seasoned meat choices
offered at Olé Taqueria.
16
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 5, 2013
By Sheila Himmel
ou could go to movies at
the Century 16 theaters
for years and never know
about the dining possibilities
one block closer to Shoreline
Amphitheater. You could work
every waking hour at Google,
the human terrarium ending
at Plymouth, and never notice
the motley crew of restaurants
accommodating people who have
to pay for their own food.
Olé Taqueria is for us. With
perfectly good food at reasonable prices, the 20-seat storefront
should be better known.
Olé occupies the sliver-thin
space of a former Hawaiian shave
ice parlor, barely visible between
Subway and the Sunny Bowl Well
Being Korean Restaurant. Maybe
this explains the need to attract
attention with my current nominee for World’s Most Annoying
Website Music. Mute before you
look, or you could get stuck in
a car, as my editor did, with a
child repeating words that make
“It’s a Small World” sound like a
symphony.
We tried most of the meats
on their list. All held their texture and were well-seasoned,
with spices and marinades that
enhanced rather than overpowered the meat.
Pollo asado — marinated
grilled chicken — held its own
in a regular burrito ($6.54) with
fluffy Spanish rice and toothsome whole pinto beans. Add
$1 for the supersize burrito with
guacamole and crema.
Carnitas, as advertised, were
crispy on the outside, moist on
the inside. The marinated pork,
pastor, is spicier and more aromatic. Like the carne asada, it is
chopped and then griddled.
Plump and slightly crisped,
8FFLFOE
N DININGNOTES
Ole Taqueria
1477 Plymouth St.
Mountain View
650-967-3006
www.star-ole.com
Hours:
Mon.-Sat., 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
Closed Sunday.
Reservations
Credit cards
Parking
Alcohol
Children
Party and
banquet
facilities
David
Ramirez and
Graciela Torres
prepare an
order during
lunch hour at
OlĂŠ Taqueria
in Mountain
View.
Wheelchair
access
Outdoor dining
Noise Level
one table
on sidewalk
fine
shrimp did surprisingly well in
a burrito, with nicely cooked
chunks of zucchini. (My bell
pepper-averse companion had to
pick out the red and green peppers, however.)
OlĂŠ does have a vegetarian
burrito and a burrito in a bowl,
but thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s about it for California
cuisine. The tortillas are freshly
made from white flour or corn,
no whole wheat or gluten-free.
Each taco ($2.25) involves
two soft corn tortillas, chopped
onions, tomatoes and cilantro.
They are juicy to start with,
and you may want to add salsa
or smoky hot sauce, so if you
have ten minutes my advice is
to eat in. Also, you get a real
plate, not paper.
DINNER BY THE MOVIES AT SHORELINEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S
Cucina Venti
ons
ervati
s
e
r
g
in
rty!
accept
iday pa
l
o
h
r
u
le!
for yo
vailab
Now
ng
cateri
a
The taco plate ($6.50) is two
tacos of your choice, rice and
beans. The quesadilla ($7.50)
also is a meal, not an appetizer,
with crema and salsa fresca.
Other menu items include
breakfast burritos, wet burritos
and burrito salads. There is a
menu section called Salvadoran,
but both times we visited, a
weekend and a weekday, they had
no pupusas ($2.25).
Continued on next page
Recipe from Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Bar in Venice
Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Bar opened in 1931 when Giuseppe Cipriani, an enterprising bartender at the
Hotel Europa in Venice, got some ďŹ nancial assistance from a rich, young American from
Boston named Harry Pickering. According to Cipriani company history, Pickering had been
a customer at the Hotel Europa for some time, suddenly stopped frequenting the hotel bar.
Cipriani saw Pickering one day and asked why he no longer patronized the bar. Pickering
was broke, he explained to the bartender -- his family cut him off when it was discovered
he had not curtailed his recklessness and fondness for drinking. So, Cipriani loaned his
patron a chunk of cash -- about 10,000 lire, or $5,000 U.S.. Two years later, Pickering walked
back into the Hotel Europa, ordered a drink at the bar, handed 10,000 lire to Giuseppe
Cipriani â&#x20AC;&#x201C; he then handed Cipriani more. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Mr. Cipriani, thank you. Hereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the money. And to
show you my appreciation, hereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 40,000 more, enough to open a bar. We will call it Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
Bar,â&#x20AC;? Located on Calle Vallaresso, close to the Piazza San Marco, the bar -- as the Ciprianiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
have always called it -- was ďŹ rst conceived as a hotel bar, serving no food, and later
transformed into a restaurant. There are many imitators, but only one Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Bar. To honor
this famous Italian culinary icon, we submit our version of one of Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Famous recipesâ&#x20AC;Ś
Tagliolini with shrimp and zucchini from Harryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Bar
(TAGLIOLINI CON I GAMBERI E LA ZUCCHINA DALLA HARRYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BAR)
s POUND FRESH YOUNG ZUCCHINI CUT INTO
1-inch by 1/4 inch strips
s POUND ABOUT MEDIUM SHRIMP
shelled, deveined and cut in half
s TABLESPOONS OLIVE OIL
s GARLIC CLOVES
CRUSHED
s TEASPOON DRIED RED PEPPER m AKES
s SALT
s ) POUND DRIED TAGLIOLINI OR FETTUCCINE OR
fresh tagliatelle (egg pasta)
s TABLESPOONS UNSALTED BUTTER
SOFTENED
s 3PLASH OF DRY WHITE WINE
s CUP FRESHLY GRATED 0ARMIGIANO
Reggiano cheese plus extra to pass at
the table
To cook:
Come see live music on the Cucina Venti patio
every Wednesday & Thursday, 5-8pm!
1390 Pear Ave., Mountain View
(650) 254-1120
www.cucinaventi.com
Hours:
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday
9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday through Saturday
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday
Bring a large pot of water to boil before preparing the sauce. If using dry pasta
salt boiling water and add pasta. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium heat.
Add the garlic, let it cook until golden, about 30 seconds, and discard it. Add the
zucchini and cook for two minutes. Add the shrimp, the pepper ďŹ&#x201A; akes, and some
salt, the wine and cook for three minutes, tossing constantly, until the shrimp are
bright pink and ďŹ rm to the touch. Reserve 1/4 cup of the mixture for garnish. Set
aside. If using fresh pasta, salt the boiling water, add the pasta, and cook until
â&#x20AC;&#x153;al denteâ&#x20AC;? (about 2-3 minutes). Drain well in a colander. Toss the pasta with the
zucchini-and-shrimp mixture, add the butter and the Parmesan, and toss well.
Transfer to a heated serving platter dish and garnish with the reserved shrimp-andzucchini mixture. Pass around a small bowl of grated Parmigiano cheese.
July 5, 2013 â&#x2013; Mountain View Voice â&#x2013; MountainViewOnline.com â&#x2013;
17
8FFLFOE
A pollo asado super burrito with pinto beans and salsa fresca, topped
with green sauce.
Continued from previous page
The drink department is a very
slim refrigerator of soft drinks
and juice (20-ounce bottles and
cans, $1.99). You can buy a bottle
of still water, or just ask for a cup
of ice water.
To sum up: Olé is not a destination taqueria, like those that
are renowned for lengua or a
production line of ingredients.
But if you’re in the vicinity for a
concert, movie or work, give it a
try. Olé Taqueria is fast, fresh and
fairly priced. N
PENINSULA
Discover the best places
to eat this week!
AMERICAN
New Tung Kee Noodle House
Armadillo Willy’s
947-8888
520 Showers Drive, Mountain View
www.shopmountainview.com/luunoodlemv
941-2922
1031 N. San Antonio Road, Los Altos
www.armadillowillys.com
INDIAN
The Old Pro
Janta Indian Restaurant
326-1446
541 Ramona Street, Palo Alto
www.oldpropa.com
462-5903
369 Lytton Ave.
www.jantaindianrestaurant.com
ITALIAN
Thaiphoon
Cucina Venti
323-7700
543 Emerson Ave, Palo Alto
www.ThaiphoonRestaurant.com
254-1120
1390 Pear Ave, Mountain View
www.cucinaventi.com
CHINESE
Chef Chu’s
Read and post reviews,
explore restaurant menus,
948-2696
1067 N. San Antonio Road
www.chefchu.com
and more at ShopPaloAlto,
Ming’s
ShopMenloPark
856-7700
1700 Embarcadero East, Palo Alto
www.mings.com
and ShopMountainView
powered by
18
185
New Chef...
New Menu...
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 5, 2013
get hours and directions
Grilled Octopus with cerignola olives,
potatoes, preserved meyer lemon, calabrian
chili and taggiasca extra virgin olive oil.
“Rich and soulful...the explosion of
flavors just went on and on and on...”
Michael Bauer, SF Chronicle, about Chef Holt’s
famous Braised Chicken Arrabbiata dish
Now open for weekend BRUNCH!
Saturday & Sunday
10:30am - 2:30pm
Open for Lunch and Dinner, Wednesday - Sunday
185 University Ave, Palo Alto
Reservations: (650) 614-1177
www.campo185.com
8FFLFOE
Public Notice for KSFH
Mountain View, CA
N MOVIEREVIEW
On November 29, 2005, KSFH was granted a
license by the Federal Communications Commission
to serve the public interest as a public trustee until
December 1, 2013.
Our license will expire on December 1, 2013. We
must ﬁle an application for renewal with the FCC
by August 1, 2013. When ﬁled, a copy of this
application will be available for public inspection
during our regular business hours. It contains
information concerning this station’s performance
during the last license term commencing on
December 1, 2005.
Antihero Gru embraces fatherhood in “Despicable Me 2.”
Not much new in Despicable Me 2
CREATIVITY MISSING IN ANIMATED FILM’S SEQUEL
-By Peter Canavese
T
he bad guy who “Gru”
into blissful domesticity
returns in “Despicable Me
2,” a CGI-animated sequel that
consistently chooses the road
more traveled.
While the original “Despicable
Me,” from 2010, wasn’t exactly
one for the ages, it had provocative undertones courtesy of its
antihero Gru (Steve Carell). Since
the first film’s arc arrived at a nice
Gru who embraced single-fatherhood with three little girls, there’s
little point in blandly extending
the story. Then again, though you
can’t squeeze blood from a turnip,
you can squeeze lucre from a hit
movie by sequelizing it.
And so Gru finds himself
recruited by the Anti-Villain
League to root out an undercover
super-villain plotting to unleash a
mutating serum. Gru would rather not get involved, but he does,
reluctantly partnering up with
AVL agent Lucy Wilde (Kristen
Wiig). Before long, Lucy’s positioned as the potential mother
Gru’s exceedingly cute daughter
The minions’ antics are the
highlight of “Despicable Me 2.”
Agnes (Elsie Fisher) has been pining for. The courtship of Agnes’
father gets “Despicable Me” into
some uncomfortable territory,
with distasteful women browbeating and/or boring Gru until
he realizes the woman for him has
been under his nose all along.
Unfortunately, Lucy’s a thinly
developed character gradually
reduced from a suffer-no-fools
professional to a passive damsel
in distress. “Despicable Me” gets
by on such stereotypes. The writers take Carell’s comical invented
Eastern European dialect as
license for not-so-comical ethnic
stereotypes: bad-guy candidates
Floyd Eagle-san (Ken Jeong,
who’s built his career on braying, thickly accented Asians) and
AQUARIUS: 430 Emerson St., Palo Alto (266-9260)
CENTURY CINEMA 16: 1500 N. Shoreline Blvd., Mountain View (800-326-3264)
CENTURY 20 DOWNTOWN: 825 Middlefield Road, Redwood City (800-326-3264)
CINEARTS AT PALO ALTO SQUARE: 3000 El Camino Real, Palo Alto (493-3456)
STANFORD THEATRE: 221 University Ave., Palo Alto (324-3700)
For show times, plot synopses and more information about any films playing at the
Aquarius, visit www.LandmarkTheatres.com
- Skip it
-- Some redeeming qualities
--- A good bet
---- Outstanding
For show times, plot synopses,
trailers and more movie
info, visit www.mv-voice.com
and click on movies.
Eduardo Perez, an obese Mexican restaurateur who may be
luchador-styled super-villain “El
Macho” in disguise (Benjamin
Bratt inherited the role from Al
Pacino, who walked off the film
just two months ago).
Carell and Wiig know their way
around funny line readings, and
“Despicable Me 2” throws a fair
amount of diverting nonsense
at the screen, from jelly guns to
fart guns (with a pesky, pecky
chicken in between). But even
kids happy to be out of the house
may smell the creative laziness
and waywardness on this one.
The defining cliche of the
last decade of animated movies
involves breaking into an ironic
music video for a pop tune that’s
become a wedding dance-floor
standard; the “Shrek” franchise
did it every time, inspiring plenty
of copycats. “Despicable Me 2”
culminates with a double-music
video finish designed to see audiences out in a pop-narcotic laughing-gas daze. As a tactic, it’s a poor
substitute for a satisfying story.
The sequel retains a hint of the
Euro-flavor and Dahl-lite tone of
its predecessor, leaning heavily on
Gru’s babbling, Twinkie-lookalike minions for crowd-pleasing
CGI slapstick. Those minions get
their own movie next Christmas,
plugged in this movie’s credits.
Too bad the creative team didn’t
just skip right to that spinoff,
bypassing this passable but rather
limp adventure.
Rated PG for rude humor and
mild action. One hour, 38 minutes. Showing at Century 16,
Century 20.
Individuals who wish to advise the FCC of facts
relating to our renewal application and to whether
this station has operated in the public interest
should ﬁle comments and petitions with the FCC
by November 1, 2013.
Further information concerning the FCC’s
broadcast license renewal process is available at
Station KSFH, (1885 Miramonte Ave., Mountain
View, CA 94040), or may be obtained from the
FCC, Washington, D.C. 20554.
PALO ALTO
CLAY GLASS
FESTIVAL
July 13 & 14, 2013
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
150 Prestigious
Clay & Glass Artists
Palo Alto Art Center
Embarcadero and
Newell, Palo Alto
Free Admission
Elaine Hyde
Anne Goldman
www.clayglassfestival.com
City of Palo Alto
July 5, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
19
(PJOHT0O
M O U N TA I N V I E W V O I C E
ART GALLERIES
‘Gone to the Wild’ - prints by Kathryn
Kain An exhibition of prints by artist Kathryn
Kain will be on display in the Mohr Gallery at the
Community School of Music and Arts (CSMA).
Monday-Saturday, June 21-July 28, 9:30 a.m.-7
p.m. Free. Community School of Music and Arts
at Finn Center, 230 San Antonio Circle, Mountain
View. www.arts4all.org/attend/mohrgallery.htm
‘Seasons’: Photography & Ceramics
Vidya Narasimhan and Thomas Arakawa will
present “Seasons,” an exhibition of photographs
and ceramics at Gallery House from July 2 to July
27. “Seasons” is a celebration of the seasonal
color palette using photography and ceramics as
media. Reception is Friday, July 12, from 6 to 8
p.m. Open every day of the week except Monday.
Free. Gallery House, 320 S. California Ave., Palo
Alto. Galleryhouse2.com
‘Storied Past: Four centuries of French
Drawings’ This exhibition features 60 French
drawings created over a span of four centuries, all
drawn from the Suida-Manning collection at the
Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas
at Austin. Saturdays and Sundays, July 6-Sept.
15, 2 p.m. Free. Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita
Drive, Stanford. www.events.stanford.edu/
byCategory/15/
CLASSES/WORKSHOPS
‘Learn to Square Dance’ Classes are held
by the “Bows & Beaus Square-Dance Club” on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m. First class free; $5 per
class thereafter. Loyola School, 770 Berry Ave.,
Los Altos.
Abilities United After School Socialization Summer Camp Abilities United After
School Socialization Program teaches children
ages 5-22 social, communication, problemsolving, negotiation, emotional regulation and
identification, and play skills through cooperative
noncompetitive games and activities. MondayFriday, June 3-August 30, 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Abiliities United, 3864 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Call
650-618-3351. www.abilitiesunited.org/page.
aspx?pid=295
Digiquest Camps - TV Studio Production Campers learn all the crew positions and
produce a TV show in the camp studio. Limited
to 12 people. Ages 10-14. Four weekly sessions,
Monday-Friday, June 17 through July 19, 9:303:30 a.m. $450 per week. Media Center, 900 San
Antonio Road, Palo Alto. Call 650-494-8686.
midpenmedia.org/digiquest
KMVT Youth Summer Camps KMVT Community Television in Mountain View offers studio
production and claymation camps for middle
school students ages 10-14. Camps are one week
long and held every winter break, spring break
and summer. June 10-August 16, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
$325. KMVT Community Television, 1400 Terra
Bella Ave., Suite M, Mountain View. Call 650968-1540. www.kmvt15.org/workshops/youth.
htmlwww.kmvt
COMMUNITY EVENTS
2013 Palo Alto Clay & Glass Festival
More than 150 local artists will display their
handcrafted glass and ceramic art at the Clay and
Glass Festival. Meet the artists while shopping,
or take part in activities such as live clay and glass
technique demonstrations. Ceramic and clay art
projects open to all artists of all ages. July 13-14,
10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. Palo Alto Art Center, 1313
Newell Road, Palo Alto. Call 650-329-2366.
www.clayglassfestival.com
Summer Outdoor Movie Night Series
The city of Mountain View is hosting a series of
outdoor movie screenings this summer. Popcorn
and light refreshments will be served. All movies begin at 8:30 p.m. or when dark enough
outside. Please bring a blanket or lawn chair for
seating. The series is co-sponsored by the City of
Mountain View Recreation Division and Youth
Advisory Committee. Movie Night schedule:
Friday, July 12 at Cuesta Park - “Madagascar
3” Friday, July 19 at Sylvan Park - “Antz” Friday,
July 26 at Eagle Park - “Wreck it Ralph” Friday,
August 2 at Stevenson Park - “Shrek” Friday,
August 9 at Whisman Park - “Dr. Suess’ The
Lorax” Friday, August 16 at Rengstorff Park
- “Hotel Translyvania” Free. Mountain View.
Call 650-903-6410. www.mountainview.gov/
city_hall/comm_services/recreation_programs_
and_services/community_events/summer_outdoor_movie_night_series.asp
CONCERTS
Kelley O’Connor and Bruce Olstad
in recital American mezzo soprano Kelley
O’Connor and pianist Bruce Olstad present a program featuring works of Elgar, Debussy, Strauss
and Hahn. All profits from the concert will benefit
The Health Trust AIDS Services. July 13, 7:30
p.m. $25. Unitarian Universalist Church of Palo
Alto, 505 E. Charleston Road, Palo Alto. www.
bodhitreeconcerts.org
DANCE
Jacki’s Aerobic Dancing Try one month of
free classes at Jacki’s Aerobic Dancing in Mountain View. The studio offers core work, strength
training and aerobic routines as well as childcare
during the classes. Classes meet every Monday,
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30%
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PRESSURE TESTING
(now $10.50)
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■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 5, 2013
N HIGHLIGHT
TONY COLUZZI PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBITION
An exhibit by Bay Area artist Tony Coluzzi, “Vietnam in Color & Landscapes in Black
& White,” will be on display at Gallery 9 in Los Altos from July 2 through July 28. The
exhibit includes works from travels to Vietnam. A reception for the artist will take
place Friday, July 5, from 5 to 8 p.m. Gallery hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.;
Sunday, noon-4 p.m. Gallery 9, 143 Main St., Los Altos. www.gallery9losaltos.com
Wednesday and Friday from 9-10 a.m. Free.
Mountain View Masonic Lodge, 890 Church St.,
Mountain View. Call 650-941-1002.
Jazz/Acro/Modern Dance Camp Dancers
ages 9-17 focus on technique and improving their
stretching while learning new combinations. July
8-12, 1-3 p.m. $135. For the Love of Dance, 2483
Old Middlefield Way Suite B, Mountain View. Call
650-861-0650. www.fortheloveofdancemv.com
EXHIBITS
Ry Smith Los Altos Hills-sponsored art exhibit
of paintings by Ry Smith, a designer of high-tech
products. Exhibit runs through Aug. 28. Free. Los
Altos Hills town hall, 26379 Fremont Road , Los
Altos Hills. Call 650-941-8073.
FAMILY AND KIDS
‘Honk! Jr.’ “Honk! Jr.” is a contemporary retelling of Hans Christian Anderson’s classic story,
“The Ugly Duckling.” Bring a picnic for your family
or purchase hot dogs and other dinner items at
the show. July 10-27, Wednesday-Sunday, 6:30-8
p.m. $12 adults, $10 children. Palo Alto Children’s
Theatre, 1305 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Call
650-463-4970. www.cityofpaloalto.org/gov/
depts/csd/theatre/default.asp
Picture Book Story Time Story Time at Linden Tree, every Friday and Saturday from 11-11:30
a.m., is ideal for preschoolers, kindergartners or
any children ages three to six. Titles are selected
from both classic favorites and new books. See
website for weekly themes. May 3-July 6, Free.
Linden Tree Books, 265 State St., Los Altos. Call
650-949-3390. www.lindentreebooks.com
Summer Concert Series Linden Tree Books
hosts their summer concert series, featuring
special guests on Wednesday mornings. Attending families can donate new books, which will be
given to Reading Partners, a local literacy organization. June 19-August 14, 10:30-11 a.m. Free.
Linden Tree Books, 265 State St., Los Altos. Call
650-949-3390. www.lindentreebooks.com
TheatreWorks PlayMakers Camp TheatreWorks Education introduces TW PlayMakers,
K-8 summer camps that feature theatre games
and activities, with each program culminating
in a performance created by the students. July
8-19, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. $550 per child. Jordan Middle
School , 750 North California Ave., Palo Alto . Call
650-463-7146. www.theatreworks.org/learn/
youth/camps
Waldorf Nursery & Kindergarten Playdate See Waldorf School of the Peninsula’s Los
Altos campus and visit a kindergarten classroom.
Children will have the opportunity to experience
Waldorf activities for nursery and kindergartenaged children, and play while parents learn more
about Waldorf’s Early Childhood programs and
availability for fall enrollment. July 13, 10-11:30
a.m. Free. Waldorf School of the Peninsula, 11311
Mora Drive, Los Altos. Call 650-209-9400. www.
waldorfpeninsula.org
FILM
ICA Summer Film Fest Stanford University’s
Division of International, Comparative and Area
Studies (ICA) hosts an international film festival. A
Stanford affiliate will introduce each film and lead
a discussion. Wednesdays, July 3-August 14, 7-10
p.m. Free. Cubberley Auditorium, 485 Lasuen
Mall, Stanford. Call 650-725-9317. www.ica.
stanford.edu/2013FilmFest
LIVE MUSIC
Brass & Organ Concert in Stanford
Memorial Church The Bay Brass and University Organist Dr. Robert Huw Morgan join together
for the 11th annual festival concert celebrating the
“Art of Sound” Summer Brass Festival. July 9, 8-9
p.m. Free. Stanford Memorial Church, 450 Serra
Mall, Building 500, Stanford. Call 650-723-1762.
www.events.stanford.edu/events/384/38459
Chris Cucuzza Flamenco guitarist Chris Cucuzza will perform at Morocco’s Restaurant. July 11,
5-11 p.m. Free. Morocco’s Restaurant, 873 Castro
St., Mountain View. Call 650-968-1502. www.
moroccosrestaurant.com
Twilight Summer Concert Series Foxtails
Brigade will start the evening, followed by Nancy
Cassidy at 7:45 p.m. July 13, 7-8:30 p.m. Free.
Rinconada Park, 777 Embarcardero Road, Palo
Alto. Call 650-463-4935. www.cityofpaloalto.
org/civic/press/display.asp?layout=1&Entry=905
ON STAGE
‘Gretel and Hansel,’ a new twist on an
old tale Written in the style of a British Pantomime for Shakespeare Santa Cruz, this version of
Gretel and Hansel is full of puns and lots of audience participation. The music, composed by Craig
Bohmler, features a number of styles from ragtime
to hip hop. Fridays and Saturdays, July 12-27,
7:30-9 p.m. $15 for children/seniors, $17 general.
Bus Barn Theatre, 97 Hillview Ave., Los Altos. Call
650-941-0551. www.losaltosrecreation.org/laytyouth-theatre.html
RELIGION/SPIRITUALITY
Friendly Shabbat Potluck Congregation
Kol Emeth will hold multiple Friday night services
in the backyard of a private home, followed by
a kosher potluck dinner. For location addresses,
please call the Kol Emeth office. July 5, 19 and 26;
August 2 and 9, 6 p.m. Free. Palo Alto. Call 650948-7498. kolemeth.org
Insight Meditation South Bay Shaila Catherine and guest teachers lead a weekly Insight
Meditation sitting followed by a talk on Buddhist
teachings. Tuesdays through August 13, 7:30-9
p.m. Free (donations accepted). St. Timothy’s/
Edwards Hall, 2094 Grant Road, Mountain View.
Call 650-857-0904. imsb.org
University Public Worship Stanford’s
Memorial Church hosts University Public Worship
with Rabbi Patricia Karlin-Neumann, senior associate dean for Religious Life, preaching and music
by university organist, Dr. Robert Huw Morgan.
July 7, 10-11 a.m. Free. Stanford Memorial Church,
450 Serra Mall, Stanford. Call 650-723-1762.
events.stanford.edu/events/368/36855
SPECIAL EVENTS
‘Fandango! An Evening in Old California’ The Los Altos History Museum is hosting
an event about the history of Californios with
era-appropriate live music, dancing, a costume
contest and a dinner menu based on California
rancho cooking. Proceeds benefit museum
programs. July 14, 5-9 p.m. $95 members; $115
non-members; Youth 9-15 years, $40. Los Altos
History Museum, 51 S. San Antonio Road, Los
Altos. www.losaltoshistory.org
‘Pork of July’ Steins Beer Garden is kicking-off
Independence Day with “Pork of July.” Executive
Chef Colby M. Reade will serve a four-course
menu, with all courses featuring pork. July 1-6,
Noon. Steins Beer Garden, 895 Villa St., Mountain
View.
TALKS/AUTHORS
Allen Ginsberg’s archivist at Stanford
Bill Morgan, biographer and personal archivist to
Allen Ginsberg, will speak at Stanford University,
home of the Ginsberg archives. Several items of
Ginsberg memorabilia will be on display. July 12,
1:30-3 p.m. Free. Stanford Humanities Center, 424
Santa Teresa St., Stanford . Call 650-724-0113.
www.events.stanford.edu/events/384/38421/
Sahar Delijani at Books Inc. Sahar Delijani shares “Children of the Jacaranda Tree,” a
novel that follows three generations of men and
women in post-revolutionary Iran. July 10, 7
p.m. Free. Books Inc., 301 Castro St., Mountain
View. Call 650-428-1234. www.booksinc.net/
event/2013/07/19/month/all/all/1
Technology and Society Committee
Luncheon Forum Al Globus, a senior research
engineer for Human Factors Research and Technology at San Jose State University at the NASA
Ames Research Center, describes what a mission
to capture and relocate a 500-ton asteroid for
analysis in the 2025 timeframe might entail. July
9, 11:45 a.m.-1 p.m. Lunch is $12. Hangen Szechuan Restaurant, 134 Castro St., Mountain View.
Call 650-969-7215. tian.greens.org/TASC.shtml
Marketplace
PLACE AN AD
ONLINE
fogster.com
E-MAIL
ads@fogster.com
PHONE
650/326-8216
Now you can log on to
fogster.com, day or
night and get your ad
started immediately online.
Most listings are free and
include a one-line free
print ad in our Peninsula
newspapers with the
option of photos and
additional lines. Exempt
are employment ads,
which include a web
listing charge. Home
Services and Mind & Body
Services require contact
with a Customer Sales
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So, the next time you have
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INDEX
N BULLETIN
BOARD
100-199
N FOR SALE
200-299
N KIDS STUFF
330-399
N MIND & BODY
400-499
N J
OBS
500-599
N B
USINESS
SERVICES
600-699
N H
OME
SERVICES
700-799
N FOR RENT/
FOR SALE
REAL ESTATE
800-899
N P
UBLIC/LEGAL
NOTICES
995-997
The publisher waives any and all claims
or consequential damages due to errors.
Embarcadero Media cannot assume
responsibility for the claims or performance
of its advertisers. Embarcadero Media has the
right to refuse, edit or reclassify any ad solely
at its discretion without prior notice.
fogster.com
THE PENINSULA’S
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Combining the reach of the Web with
print ads reaching over 150,000 readers!
fogster.com is a unique website offering FREE postings from communities throughout the Bay Area and
an opportunity for your ad to appear in the Palo Alto Weekly, The Almanac and the Mountain View Voice.
Bulletin
Board
115 Announcements
Advertise your business
or product in alternative papers across
the U.S. for just $995/week. New advertiser discount “Buy 3 Weeks, Get 1 Free”
www.altweeklies.com/ads (AAN CAN)
DID YOU KNOW
that Ten Million adults tweeted in the
past month, while
164 million read a newspaper in print
or online in the past week?
ADVERTISE in 240 California newspapers for one low cost. Your 25 word
classified ad will reach over 6 million+
Californians. For brochure call
Elizabeth (916)288-6019. (Cal-SCAN)
The business that considers
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UNPLANNED PREGNANCY?
THINKING OF ADOPTION? Open or
closed adoption. YOU choose the family. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Abby's
One True Gift Adoptions. Call 24/7.
866-413-6293. Void in Illinois/New
Mexico/Indiana (AAN CAN)
Beginning Jazz Dance (8-teen)
Dance Expressions Summer 2013
Dance Mania (5-7yr olds)
LEGO Consignment/Summer Classes!
135 Group Activities
International Homeschool
240 Furnishings/
Household items
Thanks to St Jude
Area rug 12’ x 17’ - $60.00
140 Lost & Found
Baby bassinet - 40.00
FOUND! Camera bag at Paly grad
Found~Camera bag with contents at
Palo Alto High Graduation ceremony.
Identify for return.
German language class
Instruction for Hebrew
Bar and Bat Mitzvah For Affiliated and
Unaffiliated
George Rubin, M.A. in
Hebrew/Jewish Education
650/424-1940
133 Music Lessons
ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA
SUFFERERS with Medicare. Get CPAP
Replacement Supplies at little or NO
COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best
of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 888-699-7660.
(Cal-SCAN)
Queen size sofa bed - 300
Solid wood dresser - $100.00
150 Volunteers
Swivel armchairs / ottoman - 300 per se
FRIENDS OF THE PALO ALTO LIBRARY
For Sale
201 Autos/Trucks/
Parts
BMW 2007 530xi Wagon - $24,500 ob
Toyota 2001 Corolla
CE, automatic. Low mileage 19,700.
Original owner. $5000 obo.
French Classes
through The Alliance Francaise
starting in June every Tuesday and
Thursday 7pm - 8:30pm @ Douce
France Cafe, Town and Country
Village, PA. Register: www.afsf.com
or call 415/775-7755
425 Health Services
WISH LIST FRIENDS PA LIBRARY
SLEEKCRAFT 2007 ENFORCER - $12400
130 Classes &
Instruction
comfortable chair - $50.00
DONATE BOOKS/HELP PA LIBRARY
Moms/Daughters- $ Stanford
Stanford University's Psychology
Department is currently seeking mothers with a history of depression and
their 10 to 14-year-old daughters for
a paid research study at Stanford.
Following a 20-30 minute phone screening interview, eligible participants will be
asked to come to Stanford University
for up to 3 sessions, each lasting
approximately 3.5 hours. Eligible pairs
will be compensated $40/hour and
researchers will schedule sessions at
your convenience: evenings and weekend sessions are available. For more
information, please email or call Maria
Lemus at mood@psych.stanford.edu or
(650) 723-0804.
Summer Camps & Classes 4yrs & up
Beautiful sofa and armchair - 800.00
Large Mirrored Dresser
Oak. Top condition. Eight drawers.
$150. (650) 279-2125
Midsummer Dance Young Singles
Stanford music tutoring
Beautiful armoire with interior - $700
DONATE YOUR CAR
truck or boat to Heritage for the Blind.
Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible,
Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care
Of. 888-902-6851. (Cal-SCAN)
Fosterers Needed for Moffet Cats
202 Vehicles Wanted
CASH FOR CARS
Any Car/Truck. Running or Not! Top
Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For
Instant Offer: 1-888-420-3808
www.cash4car.com (AAN CAN)
210 Garage/Estate
Sales
Atherton, 98 Inglewood Lane, July 7,
9am - 4pm
Menlo Park, 800 College Ave, July
6, 9:30-3
Designer/stager retiring. All manner of
good quality art objects—accessories,
pictures, linens, books, pottery, etc.
Also tools and fishing equipment, riding tack and miscellaneous items.
[no earlybirds!]
215 Collectibles &
Antiques
Blue ‘denim’ chenille loveseat - 350.00
China cabinet - 1200
COACH LEATHER DESKTRAY - $95Vintage armoire - 500
230 Freebies
stair lift, 13 ft long
Battery operated chair lift, in excellent
condition.
235 Wanted to Buy
Enjoyable Piano Lessons
Young, old, beginners, advanced, enjoy
the special pleasure of playing the piano
in a relaxed setting. Dr. Renee’s Piano
650 854-0543
CASH BUYER
1970 and Before, Comic Books, Toys,
Sports, entire collections wanted. I
travel to you and Buy EVERYTHING YOU
have! Call Brian TODAY:
1-800-617-3551 (Cal-SCAN)
FUN Piano|Violin|Guitar Lessons
Two sleeping bags
Leather armchair / ottoman - 100.00
Two Singer Sewing Machines - $100.00
Ea
245 Miscellaneous
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AT&T Internet+Phone+TV and get a
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DirecTV
Over 140 channels only $29.99
a month. Call Now! Triple savings!
$636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to
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Start saving today! 1-800-291-0350
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Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &
High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/
month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
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SAVE on Cable TV-InternetDigital Phone-Satellite. You`ve Got A
Choice! Options from ALL major service
providers. Call us to learn more! CALL
Today. 888-706-4301. (Cal-SCAN)
Pet bunny looking for new home - $45
Pet bunny rabbit w/food & cage - $45
250 Musical
Instruments
Story & Clark piano - $2300.00
260 Sports &
Exercise Equipment
Boat
Kid’s
Stuff
330 Child Care
Offered
Chess teacher
350 Preschools/
Schools/Camps
Free Earth Day Celebration
355 Items for Sale
Boy shoes11/12, 12,5 $4
BOY0-6MonthsClothesw/tags$50
540 Domestic Help
Wanted
NANNY/BABY-SITTER
Pick up my 2,4year old kids from school
and watch them until I get home from
work. duties will be for 2-3 days/week.
Applicant should be of the highest moral
character. Send resume, salary expectations to: ciser960@gmail.com
DONATE YOUR CAR
Fast Free Towing 24 hr. Response Tax Deduction. UNITED BREAST
CANCER FOUNDATION. Providing Free
Mammograms & Breast Cancer Info
888-792-1675 (Cal-SCAN)
Seadoo 2008 RXT-X&RXP-X - $2849
Practical Music Theory
LearningToys2-6YrsLaptop,puzzles
145 Non-Profits
Needs
MEDICAL MARIJUANA / WEEDS
original ringtones
Diadora soccercleats size13 $5
CA$H
FOR DIABETIC TEST STRIPS!! Don't
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THE TESLA SHIELD
The #1 personal energy
enhancement device.
Transformational technology for mind
body and soul. Visit
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and ordering.(Cal-SCAN)
475 Psychotherapy &
Counseling
Counseling Services
Mental Research Institute clinics offer
low cost counseling services by
appointment for individuals,
couples, families and children in
English, Spanish, and Mandarin.
Location: 555 Middlefield Rd, Palo
Alto. For information, call
650/321-3055
Jobs
500 Help Wanted
Engineer
Web QA Engineer: Position available
at Lytro, Inc. in Mountain View, CA.
Design & develop software for purpose
of ensuring quality of code comprising
Lytro's web apps.; Test existing code
of Lytro's web apps. to assist software
design & devlpmnt activities; Develop
interfaces from Lytro's bug tracking
system (Jira) to Agile software devlpmnt
tools; Help define software devlpmnt
process for Lytro's web products (including interactions & roles of QA, devlpmnt,
product marketing & customer opers.).
Reqs: Master's degree or foreign equiv.
degree in Comp. Science, Engineering
or related field & 2 yrs. of exp. w/Java,
JavaScript & C++ or in the alternative
a Bachelor's degree or foreign equiv.
degree in Comp. Science, Engineering
or related field & 5 yrs. of progressive exp. w/Java, JavaScript & C++;
Exp. developing & executing test cases
through devlpmnt & formal test phases
of project; Exp. coordinating test projects including input (reqs. from other
teams) & deliverables (data analysis,
data reviews, reporting); Knowledge of
quality assurance processes for software
devlpmnt; Exp. w/relational databases.
Resumes to: Omer Cohen, Chief People
Officer, Lytro, Inc., 1300 Terra Bella
Avenue, Mountain View, CA 94043.
Reference: WEBQA2013
560 Employment
Information
$$$HELP WANTED$$$
Extra Income! Assembling CD cases
from Home! No Experience Necessary!
Call our Live Operators Now!
1-800-405-7619 EXT 2450 http://www.
easywork-greatpay.com (AAN CAN)
AIRLINE CAREERS
begin here – Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Housing and
Financial aid for qualified students. Job
placement assistance. Call Aviation
Institute of Maintenance 877-492-3059
(AAN CAN)
AIRLINE CAREERS
begin here – Get FAA approved
Maintenance training. Financial aid for
qualified students – Housing
available. Job placement assistance.
CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance
877-804-5293 (Cal- SCAN)
DRIVERS
A few pro drivers needed! Top Pay
& 401K. Recent CDL grads wanted.
Call 877-258-8782 www.ad-drivers.com
(Cal-SCAN)
Drivers
Training Class A-CDL. Train and work for
us! Professional and
focused training for your Class A-CDL.
You choose between Company
Driver, Owner Operators, Lease Operator
or Lease Trainer. Call (877) 369-7126
www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com
(Cal-SCAN)
Paid In Advance!
MAKE up to $1000 A WEEK mailing
brochures from home! Helping
Home Workers since 2001! Genuine
Opportunity! No Experience required.
Start Immediately!
www.mailing-station.com (AAN CAN)
Business
Services
604 Adult Care
Offered
EXPERIENCED CARE GIVER
Experienced Live-in Care Giver
Available now for one or two persons Transportation, insurance, refs.
650-966-4025
615 Computers
MY COMPUTER WORKS
Computer problems? Viruses, spyware,
email, printer issues, bad internet connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional,
U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service.
Call for immediate help.
1-888-865-0271 (Cal-SCAN)
624 Financial
Cut your STUDENT LOAN
payments in HALF or more even if Late
or in Default. Get Relief FAST Much
LOWER payments. Call Student Hotline
855-589-8607 (Cal-SCAN)
GET FREE
OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW!
Cut payments by up to half. Stop
creditors from calling. 888-416-2691.
(Cal-SCAN)
Guaranteed Income
For Your Retirement. Avoid market risk
& get guaranteed income in retirement!
CALL for FREE copy of our SAFE MONEY
GUIDE Plus Annuity Quotes from A-Rated
companies! 800-375-8607 (Cal-SCAN)
GO TO FOGSTER.COM TO RESPOND TO ADS WITHOUT PHONE NUMBERS
July 5, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
21
MARKETPLACE the printed version of
fogster.com
636 Insurance
SAVE $$$ on AUTO INSURANCE
from the major names you know and
trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation.
Call READY FOR MY QUOTE now! CALL
1-888-706-8325. (Cal-SCAN)
Home
Services
710 Carpentry
779 Organizing
Services
T
General Y
650.799.7809
General CleanuGardening
PrunTrimming
New LawnSprinkler Systems
Planting
(650) 969-9894
Tired of Mow, Blow and Go?
Owner operated, 40 years exp. All phases of gardening/landscaping. Refs. Call
Eric, 408/356-1350
715 Cleaning
Services
751 General
Contracting
Acostasâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Housecleaning
Navarro Housecleaning Services
Apartments and homes. Carpets and
windows. 20 years exp., good refs.
Call for free est. 650/853-3058;
650/796-0935
Orkopina Housecleaning
Since 1985
Laundr
W
Walls/Windows
Out
Dependable, Trustworthy, Detailed
A NOTICE TO READERS:
It is illegal for an unlicensed person
to perform contracting work on any
project valued at $500.00 or more
in labor and materials. State law also
requires that contractors include their
license numbers on all advertising.
Check your contractorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s status at
www.cslb.ca.gov or 800-321-CSLB
(2752). Unlicensed persons taking
jobs that total less than $500.00
must state in their advertisements
that they are not licensed by the
Contractors State License Board.
650-962-1536
Bonded & Insured | Lic. 20624
orkopinabestcleaningservice.com
730 Electrical
A FAST RESPONSE!
lic #545936 Bob 650-343-5125.
www.HillsboroughElectric.com
Clarence Electric Co.
Residential Specialist
Troubleshooting Experts
Sr/Mil Disc/CC accept
Live Response!
#955129
Call 650-690-7995
748 Gardening/
Landscaping
Beckys Landscape
Weekly/periodic maint. Annual rose/fruit
tree pruning, clean-ups, irrigation, sod,
planting, raised beds. Power washing.
650/444-3030
Bryanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Weedwhacking
Call me today! 831-524-5278.
757 Handyman/
Repairs
ABLE
HANDYMAN
FRED
30 Years Experience
650.529.1662
650.483.4227
CompleteomeRepair
Maintenanc
emodelin
ProfessionalPainting
Carpentr
Plumbing
CustomCabineDesig
Deckence
AnMuchMore
759 Hauling
J & G HAULING SERVICE
Misc. junk, office, garage, furniture,
mattresses, green waste yard debri
and more... Lic. &Ins. FREE estimates. 650-743-8852 (see my Yelp
reviews)
Johnston Hauling
100% Recycle Junk Removal
Best Rates * Local Since 1985
650/327-HAUL; 415/999-0594
Insured - PL/PD
767 Movers
& GARDEN
Cejaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s HOME
LANDSCAPE
30 Years in family
Ya
Tree triming & removing,
including P
650.814.1577 650.455.0062
J. Garcia Garden Maintenance
Service
Free est. 20 years exp.
(650)366-4301 or (650)346-6781
J. L. GARDENING SERVICE
%
%
"$$#
%" %
!
25 Years of Exp.
650-520-9097
www.JLGARDENING.COM
LANDAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S GARDENING &
LANDSCAPING
*Yard Maintenance*New
Lawns*Clean Ups*Tree
Trimming*Wood Fences*
Rototilling*Power Washing*irrigation
timer programming.
17 years experience.
Call Ramon 650-576-6242
BAY AREA RELOCATION SERVICES
Homes, Apartments, Storage. Full
Service moves. Serving the Bay
Area for 20 yrs. Licensed & Insured.
Armando, 650-630-0424.
CAL-T190632
22
801 Apartments/
Condos/Studios
Mountain View, 1 BR/1 BA - $1620
PA: 1BR/1BA
Creekside setting. Hardwood flrs.,
carport, gardner. In 4-plex. N/P.
$1295 mo., lease. Avail. 7/15.
Call Arn Cenedella, Agent,
650/566-5329
805 Homes for Rent
Menlo Park, 3 BR/2 BA
Beautiful home on coveted, peaceful
cul-de-sac in West Menlo. Spacious
front and backyard. Newly renovated
bathrooms and kitchen. Quality fixtures,
stainless steel appliances. Washer and
dryer. Hardwood floors and wood burning fireplace. Unfurnished.
Palo Alto - $8,750/mo
Palo Alto, 3 BR/2 BA - $5000/AVLB
Palo Alto, 3 BR/2.5 BA - $4350
Palo Alto..channing Av - $4900. mo
Portola Valley, 2 BR/2 BA - $5,400.00
Redwood City - $3,900.00
Redwood City, 3 BR/2 BA - $4,000.00
Redwood City, 3 BR/2 BA - $3,900.00
809 Shared Housing/
Rooms
ALL AREAS - ROOMMATES.COM
Browse hundreds of online listings with
photos and maps. Find your roommate
with a click of the mouse! Visit: http://
www.Roommates.com. (AAN CAN)
811 Office Space
Palo Alto, 1 BR/2 BA
Large furnished office available
Tuesdays for psychotherapist.
Located in Victorian near downtown
Palo Alto. 650-327-1149.
815 Rentals Wanted
771 Painting/
Wallpaper
Glen Hodges Painting
Call me first! Senior discount. 45 yrs.
#351738. 650/322-8325
Home Based Job
STYLE PAINTING
Full service painting. Insured. Lic.
903303. 650/388-8577
775 Asphalt/
Concrete
Mtn. View Asphalt Sealing
Driveway, parking lot seal coating.
Asphalt repair, striping. 30+ yrs. family owned. Free est. Lic. 507814.
650/967-1129
Roe General Engineering
Asphalt, concrete, pavers, tiles, sealing,
new construct, repairs. 35 yrs exp.
No job too small. Lic #663703.
650/814-5572
820 Home Exchanges
825 Homes/Condos
for Sale
Los Altos - $799000
Menlo Park, 3 BR/2 BA - $1099000
Palo Alto, 3 BR/2 BA - $899000
995 Fictitious Name
Statement
FEELING GOOD INSTITUTE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 579255
The following person (persons) is (are)
doing business as:
Feeling Good Institute, located at 2660
Solace Place, Suite A, Mountain View,
CA 94040, Santa Clara County.
This business is owned by: An
Individual.
The name and residence address of
the owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are):
MAOR KATZ
520 Franklin St.
Mountain View, CA 94041
Registrant/Owner has not yet begun to
transact business under the fictitious
business name(s) listed herein.
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara
County on June 6, 2013.
(MVV June 14, 21, 28, July 5, 2013)
ThinkJelly
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 579875
The following person (persons) is (are)
doing business as:
ThinkJelly, located at 1236 Vicent Dr.
Apt. C, Sunnyvale, CA 94086, Santa
Clara County.
This business is owned by: An
Individual.
The name and residence address of the
owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are):
SUSHMA Dâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;SOUZA
1236 Vicente Dr. Apt. C
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
Registrant/Owner began transacting
business under the fictitious business
name(s) listed herein on 06/19/2013.
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara
County on June 21, 2013.
(MVV June 28, July 5, 12, 19, 2013)
SF COUTURE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 580060
The following person (persons) is (are)
doing business as:
SF Couture, located at 160 W. Arbor
Ave, Sunnyvale, CA 94085, Santa Clara
County.
This business is owned by: An
Individual.
The name and residence address of the
owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are):
ISABEL FAJARDO DELGADO
160 W. Arbor Ave.
Sunnyvale, CA 94085
Registrant/Owner has not yet begun to
transact business under the fictitious
business name(s) listed herein.
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara
County on June 27, 2013.
(MVV July 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013)
997 All Other Legals
NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO SELL
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
Date of Filing Application:
June 13, 2013
To Whom It May Concern:
The Name(s) of Applicant(s) is/are:
PMAB-6 LLC
The applicants listed above are applying to the Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control to sell alcoholic
beverages at:
545 San Antonio Rd.
Ste. 31
Mountain View, CA 94040-1217
Type of license(s) applied for:
47 - ON-SALE GENERAL EATING PLACE
(MVV July 5, 12, 19, 2013)
Need to publish a
fictitious business
statement in a
Santa Clara County
newspaper of general
circulation?
s 4HE -OUNTAIN 6IEW 6OICE IS ADJUDICATED TO
publish in the County of Santa Clara.
s /UR ADJUDICATION INCLUDES THE -ID
Peninsula communities of Palo Alto,
Stanford, Los Altos and Mountain View.
s 4HE -OUNTAIN 6IEW 6OICE PUBLISHES EVERY
Friday.
Redwood City, 3 BR/2 BA - $599000
Sunnyvale, 3 BR/2 BA - $599999
Woodside, 3 BR/2 BA - $1099000
840 Vacation
Rentals/Time Shares
$399 Cabo San Lucas
All Inclusive Special - Stay 6 Days
In A Luxury BeachFront Resort With
Unlimited Meals And Drinks For $399!
www.luxurycabohotel.com
888-481-9660 (Cal-SCAN)
850 Acreage/Lots/
Storage
Land for sale
80 acres near San Jose. $125000
www.80acres.weebly.com
SOLID ROCK PAVING
Service your driveway now!
1VCMJD/PUJDFT
WE CAN HANDLE ALL YOUR
LEGAL PUBLISHING NEEDS
Just call Alicia at
(650) 223-6578
Teacher Looking for Quiet Rental
Leo Garcia Landscape/
Maintenance
Lawn and irrig. install, clean-ups.
Res. and comml. maint. Free Est.
Lic. 823699. 650/369-1477.
FOGSTER.COM
Real
Estate
Samâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Garden Service
Cabinetry-Individual Designs
Precise, 3-D Computer Modeling:
Mantels * Bookcases * Workplaces
*Wall Units * Window Seats. Ned Hollis,
650/856-9475
Excellent Housecleaning
Excellent References!
Rosalina Lopez 1-650-308-5109.
End the Clutter & Get Organized
Residential Organizing
by Debra Robinson
(650)941-5073
THE PENINSULAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S FREE CLASSIFIEDS WEBSITE
TO RESPOND TO ADS WITHOUT PHONE NUMBERS
GO TO WWW.FOGSTER.COM
To place a Classified ad in
The Almanac, The Palo Alto Weekly
or The Mountain View Voice
call 326-8216 or visit us at fogster.com
â&#x2013; Mountain View Voice â&#x2013; MountainViewOnline.com â&#x2013; July 5, 2013
Deadline: 5 p.m. the previous Friday
To assist you with your
legal advertising needs
Call Alicia Santillan (650) 223-6578
E-mail: asantillan@paweekly.com
Trusted
Real estate
Professional
Royce
...Your Condo & Townhome Specialist
N
SU
&
M
T
SA :30P
N
4
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OP :30
1
929 E El Camino Real #J139
Sunnyvale
3 bed | 2 ba | 1,832 sq ft
5DUHO\DYDLODEOHVWRU\FRQGRHQG
XQLWRIIHUVVSDFLRXVOLYLQJURRP
ZLWKÂżUHSODFHVHSDUDWHIDPLO\URRP
YLHZVRIWKHJROIFRXUVH
Kathleen Wilson
650.543.1094
kwilson@apr.com
wo
Power of T
Yvonne Heyl
Direct (650) 947-4694
Cell (650) 302-4055
DRE# 01255661
yheyl@interorealestate.com
Offered at $715,000
N
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&
M
T
SA :30P
N
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OP :30
1
968 Asilomar Terrace #2
Sunnyvale
2 bed | 2 ba | 988 sq ft
'HVLUDEOHWRSĂ&#x20AC;RRUFRQGRHQGXQLW
ZLWKRSHQOLYLQJURRP GLQLQJ
URRPLQVLGHODXQGU\SULYDWHGHFN
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Jeff Gonzalez
Direct (650) 947-4698
Cell (408) 888-7748
DRE# 00978793
jgonzalez@interorealestate.com
Team DRE# 70000637
yvonneandjeff@interorealestate.com
www.yvonneandjeff.com
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Is Quality Important to You? We Measure Quality by Resultsâ&#x20AC;?
Offered at $425,000
N
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&
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SA :30P
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1
551 Grand Fir Avenue #4
Sunnyvale
2 bed | 1 ba | 894 sq ft
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HQGXQLWZLWKJHQHURXVVL]H
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Offered at $399,000
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Good for Business. Good for You.
Good for the Community.
INCREASE
YOUR
EXPOSURE
Get your name known in
the community.
Showcase your listings
to thousands of potential
buyers and sellers.
Call Rosemary at the
Mountain View
J
2 bed | 2 ba | 978 sq ft
8SGDWHGFRQGRZLWKKDUGZRRG
Ă&#x20AC;RRUVÂżUHSODFH SULYDWH\DUG
List Price $475,000
Sold Price $525,000
AMONG TOP 5% OF REALTORS IN SILICON VALLEY
Sold with multiple offers!
Making your real estate
dreams come true!
JU
S
O
TS
2025 California Street #25
Mountain View
LD
Rely on a life-long area resident to sell or buy
your next home. I am committed to providing
the â&#x20AC;&#x153;absolute best serviceâ&#x20AC;? to you.
2 bed | 1 ba | 768 sq ft
Located in a gated complex
7RSĂ&#x20AC;RRUFRQGRHQGXQLW
%DOFRQ\RYHUORRNVFRXUW\DUG
Recognize the difference of working with a proven,
experienced sales & business professional.
List Price $368,000
Sold Price $368,000
Jerylann Mateo,
Broker Associate / Realtor
Direct: 650.209.1601
Cell: 650.743.7895w
jmateo@apr.com
www.jmateo.com
DRE# 01362250
650-964-6300
T
US
L
SO
Royce Cablayan
DRE# 01062078
The #1 Selling Agent in Mountain View since 1995
Â&#x2021;goroyce@gmail.com
www.reroyce.com
Colleen Rose
DRE# 01221104
apr.com | LOS ALTOS 167 S. San Antonio Road 650.941.1111
Â&#x2021;colleen@serenogroup.com
July 5, 2013 â&#x2013; Mountain View Voice â&#x2013; MountainViewOnline.com â&#x2013;
23
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